Laughter as a social rejection cue: Influence of prior explicit experience of social rejection on cardiac signs of “freezing”
The study aimed at investigating the immediate cardiac effect of the sudden perception of other people's laughter after experimentally manipulating healthy participants' proneness to experience laughter as a cue of social threat. We expected that participants would show cardiac signs of fr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of psychophysiology 2018-06, Vol.128, p.1-6 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The study aimed at investigating the immediate cardiac effect of the sudden perception of other people's laughter after experimentally manipulating healthy participants' proneness to experience laughter as a cue of social threat. We expected that participants would show cardiac signs of freezing (i.e., sustained heart rate deceleration immediately after perception of the laughter) after prior social rejection but not or less so after prior acceptance, due to an increased bias to perceive the ambiguous social signal as a cue of social threat and rejection after rejection had been primed. Contrary to expectations, the perception of other people's laughter elicited a decelerative (freezing) response regardless of whether it was preceded by the experience of social rejection or acceptance. The response was prolonged in participants who had been accepted beforehand compared to those who had been rejected. The findings indicate that, given a relevant social context, other people's laughter can be a powerful cue of social threat and rejection also in healthy individuals. Prolonged heart rate deceleration after an ambiguous social signal may facilitate the processing of significant social information in the socially threatening situation. The study adds to the literature rendering the course of the immediate transient heart rate response a useful tool in social rejection research. Additionally, the findings suggested that in some cases the further progress of transient heart rate changes in more extended time-windows (about 30 s) may provide additional relevant information about the processing of social cues.
•Cardiac signs of freezing (sustained heart rate slowing) after perception of laughter•Prolonged response after prior acceptance than after social rejection•Course of immediate HR response sensitive indicator of effects of social context•Depending on social context laughter can be a cue of social threat and rejection. |
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ISSN: | 0167-8760 1872-7697 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2018.03.022 |